Up
in time for the buffet breakfast, which I expected to be a waffle,
juice, and coffee. Instead, we were treated to an absolutely
first-class buffet! It's a 24-hour thing, so there's everything from
pork chops to Chinese food (duh!) to a fruit and salad bar. I ate
too much. Very cosmopolitan restaurant, with delegations from
Africa, Middle East, etc. All here to do business, I’m sure!
After
we checked out our tour group, who are all strangers at this point,
were all standing around in the lobby waiting for the tour guys to
start loading us into buses. I decided to wait outside and catch a
little of Wuhan's ambience. It was 20 at 09:00, a perfect spring
day. The first thing I noticed was that the air had a very
distinctive odor. Egg roll with a bit of machine oil? Deb says the
air smells a bit sweet. Not unpleasant at all, but definitely not
Kamloops! All of us chickens were then herded onto three buses and
we headed out for a city tour. That's not the right description; if
we actually toured the city we'd still be there. At 10 million,
Wuhan is not a first-rank city like Chongquing (33 million), Shanghai
(24 million), or Beijing (21 million), but it still gets the job
done. When I told Charley the tour guide that I lived in a city of
80,000 he laughed and told me that would be called a village in
China. It was hard to get a grip on the city; we'd be driving
towards a bunch of brand new high-rise towers which looked like the
city centre, but there was another cluster off to the left that
looked the same, and when we got to the first cluster there were
three more bunches ahead and off to the side. Where the hell was the
city centre? It just goes like that for miles and miles. Wuhan is
growing at over 10% a year, which means that they build enough new
housing to hold everyone in Vancouver every 9 months. Eeek! The
city is on the Yangtze River, which is bigger than the lower Columbia
(it's big) and getting across it is a pain in the butt. Bridges
aren't going up fast enough so they've started on a planned 7
tunnels, and by 2040 they expect to have 21 crossings built. Yikes.
The energy level here is spectacular.
We
then went to the city museum for a guided tour of a bronze-age tomb.
Some folks were excavating for a new building a few years back and
they came upon a prince's tomb that is estimated at 3500 years old,
late Bronze Age. It was completely flooded with cold, oxygen-free
water so everything in it was virtually perfectly preserved.
Apparently this guy decided he was going to take all his stuff along
with him (hard to argue with), so his four-room tomb had eight types
of musical instruments including strings, horns, drums, and bells as
well as a complete kit for
wine-making
on an industrial scale. Clearly this guy wasn't planning on running
out. We spent a couple hours in there and then went for a look
around the rest of the museum. Tres cool.
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| A rack to hold musical bells. Note the intricate bronze casting in all these pieces. |
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| This was a wine carafe. I like this guy. |
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| The museum grounds, with city in background. |
| It’s getting so you have to go to China to see your friends.
Ginnie and Randy from Hinton, and Irma and Jack from Vernon.
|
We
were headed out the door to the bus when I glanced to the side and
there were Jack and Irma, our very good Mexico friends who live in
Vernon. After hugs and kisses all around we were chattering away
when Debbi glanced across the entry all and there was Ginnie and
Randy, Deb's sister and her husband from Hinton. This planet is just
getting tooooooo small! They had all just got off of the ship we
were going to get onto, and it turned out that we were all going to
lunch together, so much information was exchanged in the limited time
we had available. Bottom line, they had a really great time so it
sounds like we don't have to worry about any significant unforseens.
Then
it was on to the ship for the rest of the day to get settled in and
find our way around. The ship is very nice, with a buffet restaurant
and lobby on the second floor, accommodations on the third and fourth
floor, a very large forward lounge on the fifth floor, and a high-end
restaurant and large open afterdeck on the sixth floor. The
untermenschen live on the first floor (and possibly the zero-th), I
guess. Everything is arranged around a circular atrium with open
mahogany stairs that goes through all five floors, and there are
little shops and service providers scattered all over. Very nice,
and everyone is friendly and very helpful. Our room is great, it's
250 sq ft with flatscreen tv (hbo, cnn, bbc are the only English
channels), coffee machine, great shower in the bathroom, and a nice
little two-person balcony. Maid comes around twice a day. All very
clean and well-maintained. The only surprise was that the mandatory
tip for the staff (300 yuan, or $60 each for the full trip) had to be
paid in cash upfront. Don't forget!
| Our stateroom with balcony behind the curtains. |
| The rotunda and staircase. |
We
went for a bit of a walk that afternoon and found a tiny little shop
that sold decent red wine for $20/bottle. Since that's half of the
$40/bottle they want on the ship we got a couple for the room. They
have no issue with bringing booze onto the ship.... Crossing the
street was an experience, they WILL run you over if given a decent
opportunity so be careful out there! We ended up in the middle of
the street with cars and trucks swooshing by about a foot from our
noses, and the ones behind us going the other way were just as close!
Cross with the locals. The river is very busy here, and it's really
interesting to watch as they have ships rigged out with ca. 5x10
metre video screens as floating billboards, and quite a few ships
that are covered in fluorescent light or laser light displays. We
began to steam up the river around 9 pm, and after everyone watched
the light show until we cleared the city we all headed off to bed to
shake off the remnants of jet lag.
| This is a boat. The ads change every 10 seconds. |
| These boats are covered with rippling, constantly
changing light shows. I think they’re for excursions.
|



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